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Thursday, April 21, 2016

The Stoessel Report




Unfortunately for John Stoessel he was diagnosed with lung cancer this month. I pray for his speedy recovery. In the process of being discharged from hospital he complained the customer service was terrible..  His complaint was not extraordinary.  Mr. Stoessel of FOX news is known for ihis acerbic commentary about current events.

Mr. Stoessel did not specify how or if his medical care suffered.  This event by a visible 'celebrity' will undoubtedly ring bells and remove stars (*****) from the hospital's HEDIS ranking and Medicare's STAR system of measuring quality assurance. I pity the hospital CEO or the VP of medical affairs. For certain the Board of Trustees will forgo their usual free lunch to allow this item to be placed on the next agenda.

I would like to add that his physicians probably have the same complaints about provider services. Such things as having to wait for an operating room, or the constant demands for paper work, signing orders, inadequate parking,and having to wear an identification card and/or a security card. and of course being frowned upon for dissing nurses administrators.  This says nothing about the disappearance of free meals every day and steaks on Friday.  When I was a sprig of a physician back in mid 20th century I expected a full buffet spread with a chef to serve me in the doctor's dining room. This of course ocurred in Orange County California where normalcy included two Mercedes in the garage (there were no Tesla's at the time) and a beach house.  At the time hospitals were popping up in the bean fields.  Doctors would chose their hospital rounds at a time when meals were being served.

Today all of those perks are gone. The small one story hospitals are gone or have morphed into multistory hotels without customer service.  There are even chains of hospitals managed or owned by nationwide companies.

John, I would like to thank you for your objective measure of hospital quality.  I do pray for your prompt recover, thanks to modern medicine. The cost of things now just does not allow for 'customer service.' That went out the window due to cutbacks long before the Affordable Care Act.

As a very visible 'celebrity' I salute your expose. I hope you will join those of us who campaign daily for patient and provider advocacy.  I wholeheartedly encourage you to continue your commentary about patient experience's.

And please don't forget us poor providers.Perhaps we should invite you to a medical staff meeting. Perhaps I can assist you there. Do you have an agent ?

A fan,

Gary M.Levin M.D.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Don Quixote and the Health Professional’s Endless Quest | THCB

Recently The Health Care Blog featured a post by Richard Gunderman M.D.



Don Quixote on his mount, Rocinate, with Sancho Panza

Are we as physicians destined to also flail at windmills?  In the modern era we face similar obstacles

"April 22 marks the 400th anniversary of the death of the greatest novelist who ever lived, Miguel de Cervantes. Though the day will pace unnoticed by most physicians, it is in fact one many should note. Why? Because both his life and work can serve as vital sources of inspiration and resilience for health professionals everywhere."

Cervantes faced numerous disappointments and setbacks in life – poverty, imprisonment, slavery, serious injury, and repeated rejection. Not unlike many contemporary health professionals, he had many reasons to become discouraged and give up. Yet he found the will to carry on. Where did he find such inspiration and resilience? I believe that he found them above all in his work – not the reactions of critics or the royalties he collected, but his deep belief in his life’s mission.
Though the novel is filled with battles of various kinds, Don Quixote reminds contemporary health professionals that the real battle takes place within.
"In giants we must kill pride and ignorance. But our greatest foes, and those we must chiefly combat, are within. Envy we must overcome by generosity and nobleness of spirit; anger, by a reposed and quiet mind; riot and drowsiness, by vigilance and temperance; lasciviousness, by our inviolable fidelity to the mistresses of our thoughts; and sloth, by our indefatigable peregrinations through the universe. . . . This, Sancho, is the road to lasting fame and good and honorable renown."
Richard Gunderman makes me realize it is time  to re-read Miguel de Cervantes.


















Don Quixote and the Health Professional’s Endless Quest | THCB

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Social Media Marketing Leads to Reduce Stigma associated with Mental Illness

Social Media has already played a role in improving treatment of mental illness. The result is improved economic benefit to California's economy.

A statewide social marketing campaign to reduce the stigma associated with mental illness has brought economic benefit to California’s economy, a new study says.
How? By boosting the employability, productivity and incomes of people afflicted by psychiatric conditions, according to the study, published Thursday by the RAND Corporation, a Santa Monica-based policy think tank. 
The study showed that people in need of mental health treatment who were exposed to the anti-stigma message of the social marketing campaign were more likely to seek help. Those who get treatment have a significantly higher chance of finding good-paying jobs, thus contributing more tax dollars to state coffers, it said.
“This is an important finding,” said Alejandra Acuña, an assistant professor of social work at California State University, Northridge. “Social marketing campaigns have been used with great results to change behavior and address public health concerns like nutrition and HIV testing.”
Reducing stigma, especially in the minds of people who suffer from mental illness, was a key priority. Central to the effort was a multi-faceted social media campaign that delivered stigma-reducing messages in a variety of forms, including documentaries, public services announcements, online public forums and multimedia advertisements.
An important part of the media campaign was a documentary that recounts the stories of California residents who have suffered from mental illness and recovered. It was broadcast numerous times on public television stations, showed to community groups and other audiences and is posted on the CalMHSA-funded website, EachMindMatters.org.
“The goal is to change the conversation [about mental health] in our society by increasing knowledge and changing attitudes,” said Wayne Clark, executive director of CalMHSA. “The better mental health people have, the more productive citizens they will be.”
Scott Ashwood, lead author of the RAND study, said an estimated 121,000 people per year seek mental health treatment after being exposed to a social marketing campaign’s anti-stigma, anti-discrimination message.  
Discrimination against people with mental health illnesses continues to be a serious social problem, experts say, though many of them think society is headed in the right direction.
And stigma in the eyes of others isn’t the only problem.
“Part of it has to with a person’s own self-perception,” said Tom Loats, director of behavioral health at St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, Calif. “People believe they have to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps. That’s silly. You can’t do that for diabetes or heart disease.”
“If they recognize and accept their illness, they will seek treatment and function better,” Delacruz said. But they have to jump through the stigma barrier, she said, that’s where these social media campaign efforts can help.

State Economy Gains By Reducing the Stigma of Mental Illness, Study Says


Republican experts trash Trump's healthcare 'plan'



Donald Trump's objectively awful healthcare "plan" continues to baffle and "exasperate" Republican policy types who are going to have be responsible for defending it—and him—should he get the nomination. None of them seem to have any problem now, however, unloading about just how much of a mess it is.



“If you repeal the Affordable Care Act, you’ve got to have a serious way to expand coverage to replace what you have taken away,” said Gail R. Wilensky, who was the administrator of Medicare and Medicaid under President George Bush from 1990 to 1992. “There’s nothing I see in Trump’s plan that would do anything more than cover a couple million people.”
Robert Laszewski, a former insurance executive and frequent critic of the health law, called Mr. Trump’s health care proposals “a jumbled hodgepodge of old Republican ideas, randomly selected, that don’t fit together.” […]
James C. Capretta, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative nonprofit group, said Mr. Trump underestimated how difficult it would be to uproot a law that was now embedded in the nation’s health care system. […] "I just don’t see that in Trump’s vague plans to repeal the law and replace it with something beautiful and great.” […]
Grace-Marie Turner, the president of the Galen Institute, a champion of free-market health policy, said Mr. Trump’s proposals were sketchy and inadequate.   All of which Trump's chief policy adviser, Sam Clovis, dismisses in a manner that's totally emblematic of the entire campaign. When it comes to policy, there just isn't any beyond a bunch of catch phrases and emphatic bluster from Trump.
Clovis says that his candidate is running against the political establishment, so these criticisms just don't matter because he's not relying on "traditional establishment Republican people" like them. Instead he has a half-dozen or so advisers who are "very prominent people," but who "are not ready to have their support of the Trump campaign known." 
Yeah, I bet they're not anxious to be known.














Republican experts trash Trump's healthcare 'plan'

Friday, April 8, 2016

Covered California Imposes New Quality, Cost Conditions On Plans | California Healthline

It's about time!



In the early days of Medicaid when it was formed it was considered a safety-net for those who were uinsured,  unemployed, and below a certain poverty line to become eligible for 'state aid'. In reality the federal government subsidizes the state-run medicaid system.

Even then the system was riddled with deficits in reimbursement to providers hospitals, and quality of care was an issue.  The system was burdened with bureaucracy and late payments with little response from state agencies about errors in reimbursement and little  chance of adjudication of denied claims that were denied.



While federal and state programs set goals for private insurers in term of quality assurance Medicaid was not required to meet to meet those standards, until very recently.  The Affordable Care Act has begun a slow process of improvement.


Moving into a realm usually reserved for health care regulators, Covered California Thursday unveiled sweeping reforms to its contracts with insurers, seeking to improve the quality of care, curb its cost and increase transparency for consumers.
Among the biggest changes: Health plans will be required to dock hospitals at least 6 percent of their payments if they do not meet certain quality standards, or give them bonuses of an equal amount if they exceed the standards.

The plan, to be implemented over seven years, is based on a similar strategy pursued by the federal agency that oversees the government-run Medicaid and Medicare health insurance programs.
Seven years is a prolonged adjustment period for new regulations to be implemented.
Covered California will also require health plans to identify hospitals and doctors that are performing poorly on a variety of quality metrics or charging too much for care. The plans must dump the providers from their networks as early as 2019 if they don’t mend their ways. The plans could choose not to cut the hospitals or doctors, but they would have to explain in writing why, and detail what the providers are doing to address their deficiencies.
Some doctors have noted that provider networks in many of the health plans sold by Covered California are already thin and warned that cutting the networks even more would only exacerbate the problem. And, they say, some hospitals and physicians might balk at the stringent new requirements and decline to participate in Covered California networks.
Among other elements of Covered California’s contract overhaul:
  • Health plans must assign a primary care doctor to enrollees within 30 days of coverage.
  • Health plans and doctors must share data to better track and treat patients with chronic conditions such as diabetes.
  • Plans are obliged to monitor and reduce health disparities among all their patients, starting with four major conditions: diabetes, hypertension, asthma and depression.
  • They also are required to better manage the price of high-end pharmaceuticals and aid consumers in reducing the cost of expensive drug treatments.
  • The health plans must help consumers better understand their diseases and treatment choices – and their share of the costs for those treatments.
While not dealing with problems, it is the first time Medicaid will be required to meet standards set for private insurers.

Perhaps some requirements of the Affordable Care Act will bear fruit.




Thursday, April 7, 2016

Running To Beat Schizophrenia | California Healthline

Marco Tapia, 28, was diagnosed with schizophrenia four years ago and runs regularly to help manage his condition. (Courtesy of the University of California, Los Angeles)





Exercise is good for the brain, whether normal or abnormal.  It has  been found that not only does exercise increase blood flow to the brain, exercise also has other indirect effects on the brain.

Like so many,the effects of exercise led to a serendipitous discovery.


For most of his life, Marco Tapia viewed exercise as a way to stay in shape. He played soccer growing up. It was recreation, and an opportunity to hang out with his friends.
But since Tapia was diagnosed with schizophrenia four years ago, physical activity has taken on a new, more urgent value for the 28-year-old.

A new study by researchers at UCLA’s Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior shows that regular aerobic exercise has significant benefits for young schizophrenia patients, such as Tapia.
The research reveals that an intensive routine of both physical and mental exercises, especially in the early stages of schizophrenia, can help repair the deficits in memory, problem solving and social intelligence that are associated with the illness.

Tapia was part of a 10-week pilot study at the Aftercare Research Program, a clinic at the Semel Institute. He and his family found out about the free program after an episode of schizophrenia landed him in the hospital in 2012.

Combined with behavioral therapy, and medications this combined treatment may offer a meaningful quality of life for those diagnosed with schizophrenia. 

Self-portrait of a person with schizophrenia, representing that individual's perception of the distorted experience of reality in the disorder









“What’s striking to us is the power of combination,” Nuechterlein said. “Both [brain games and exercise] done separately help somewhat, but when done together, the boost in cognitive function is greater.”
In the pilot study, one group participated in computerized cognitive training, while a second group did the same computer training in addition to 150 minutes of exercise videos a week.
The patients completed a variety of tests, including a dot-to-dot drawing. The completion time for the group that exercised dropped from 37 to 25 seconds — not too far from the average completion time of 22 seconds among people without schizophrenia.
In a second and ongoing study, 32 people who experienced their first schizophrenic episode within the last two years were put through similar computer-based training. Half of them also engaged in aerobic exercises led by physical trainers.
Workouts were a combination of jumping jacks, lunges, running, and other types of cardiovascular exercise. The exercises don’t require special equipment and can be adapted almost anywhere, Nuechterlein said. The participants’ heart rate and calories were monitored

Today neuroscience, genomic, advanced brain imaging will all contribute to understanding this life-threatening  disease.


Running To Beat Schizophrenia | California Healthline

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Patients and Consumers Use of Evidence

Conversation opened. 1 unread message.
What patients andconsumers must know about how their providers will be reimbursed in the future. It does not have much to do with how many services you will use.It is all based upon unproven algorithms










 
REMINDER:
Health Affairs Briefing, April 7, 2016
Patients' And Consumers' Use Of Evidence
#patientevidence


The health policy literature is filled with references to providers, but patients are all too often left out of the conversation regarding how to best meet their needs. Growing attention to patient-centered care - with the attendant need for a better understanding of patient goals, better methods for engaging patients in their care, and better measures of outcomes that have meaning for patients - recognizes the moral and practical need to view patients as the center of the health care system. 
The April 2016 issue of Health Affairs, "Patients' And Consumers' Use Of Evidence," contains a comprehensive examination of the issues related to engaging patients more fully in decisions about health care delivery.  You are invited to join us on Thursday, April 7, 2016, at a forum at the W Hotel in Washington, where authors from the issue will discuss their work.  Panels will cover:
  • The Patient Engagement Imperative
  • How Do We Engage Patients?
  • Patient Narratives
  • Report Cards
  • Engaging on Price and Quality
Among the confirmed speakers are: 
  • Cindy Brach, Senior Health Policy Researcher at the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, on NARRATIVE MATTERS: Even In An Emergency, Doctors Must Make Informed Consent An Informed Choice
  • Kristin Carman, Vice President, American Institutes for Research, on Understanding An Informed Public's Views On The Role Of Evidence In Making Health Care Decisions
  • Daniel Dohan, Professor, Health Policy and Social Medicine, University of California San Francisco, on The Importance Of Integrating Narrative Into Health Care Decision Making
  • Mark Fendrick, Professor, Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, on Value-Based Insurance Design: Improving Adherence Through Shifting Benefit Designs
  • Steven Findlay, Independent Journalist and Consumer Advocate, and Contributing Editor, Consumer Reports, on ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY Consumer Interest In Provider Ratings Grows, And Improved Report Cards And Other Steps Could Accelerate Their Use
  • Mirjam Garvelink, Postdoctoral Researcher, Research Center of the Chu de Quebec-UniversitĂ© Laval, on AGING & HEALTH: A Synthesis Of Knowledge About Caregiver Decision-Making Finds Gaps In Support For Those Who Care For Aging Loved Ones
  • Jessica Greene, Associate Dean, Research, George Washington University, on Summarized Costs, Placement Of Quality Stars, And Other Online Displays Can Help Consumers Select High-Value Health Plans
  • Danielle Lavallee, Research Assistant Professor, Division of General Surgery, University of Washington, on Incorporating Patient-Reported Outcomes Into Health Care To Engage Patients And Enhance Care
  • Marcelo Coca Perraillon, Assistant Professor, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, on AGING & HEALTH: Use Of Nursing Home Compare Website Appears Limited By Lack Of Awareness And Initial Mistrust Of The Data
  • Benjamin Ranard, Graduate Student, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, on Yelp Reviews Of Hospital Care Can Supplement And Inform Traditional Patient Experience Of Care Surveys
  • Joe Selby, Executive Director, PCORI
  • Anna Sinaiko, Research Scientist, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, on Examining A Health Care Price Transparency Tool: Who Uses It And How They Shop For Care
  • Mildred Solomon, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Hastings Center, on ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY The Ethical Imperative And Moral Challenges Of Engaging Patients And The Public With Evidence
  • Ming Tai-Seale, Senior Scientist, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, on Enhancing Shared Decision Making Through Carefully Designed Interventions That Target Patient And Provider Behavior
  • Peter Ubel, Associate Director, Health Sector Management and Madge and Dennis T. McLawhorn University Professor, Duke University, on Study Of Physician And Patient Communication Identifies Missed Opportunities To Help Reduce Patient Out-Of-Pocket Spending
  • John Westfall, Professor of Family Medicine and Director of the High Plains Research Network, University of Colorado, on Reinventing The Wheel Of Medical Evidence: How The Boot Camp Translation Process Is Making Gains
  • Holly Witteman, Assistant Professor to the Vice Dean of Education and Professional Development, UniversitĂ© Laval, on One-Sided Social Media Comments Influenced Opinions And Intentions About Home Birth: An Experimental Study
  • Steven Woolf, Director, Center on Society and Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, on VIEWPOINT: Authentic Engagement Of Patients And Communities Can Transform Research, Practice, And Policy
  • Charlene Wong, Pediatrician, University of Pennsylvania/Children's Hospital of Pennsylvania, on For Third Enrollment Period Marketplaces Expand Decision Support Tools To Assist Consumers
Health Affairs is grateful to PCORI for its support of the
content on patients' use of evidence
 and the event.
WHEN:
Thursday, April 7, 2016 
9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 

WHERE:
W Hotel Washington, 515 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC (Metro Center) 



Health Affairs is the leading journal at the intersection of health, health care, and policy. Published by Project HOPE, the peer-reviewed journal appears each month in print, with additional Web First papers published periodically and Health Policy Briefs published twice monthly at www.healthaffairs.org. You can also find the journal on Facebook and Twitter. Read daily perspectives on the Health Affairs Blog. Download weekly "Narrative Matters" podcasts on iTunes. If you do not wish to receive e-mail notifications or invitations in the future, please email dboylan@projecthope.org.


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Friday, April 1, 2016

Pranks for April Fools Day in the Hospital, or Office

Please  wait for slow video to load



These were very funny and I wanted to share it with the Health Train Express family.
Have a safe April Fool's Day

gml

Introduction: Storm's Coming

It is a bit late for the weather forecast for health reform.


In October 2013 the leading edge and eye of the hurricane was here.  After many forecasters warned of it's approach to health care, some chose to evacuate (retire early), join group practices (shelters) and some persisted in their old ways, unable or unwilling to adapt.  The tidal surge removed most of the laggards.



In health care the mantra "Move ahead or face extinction" has become reality Those who chose to change are still working as physicians.  Some medical practices faced insovency and ended in bankruptcy.

Nicholas Negroponte, co-founder of MIT's Media Lab quote:  "Computing is not about computers anymore, it is about living".

The storm eye is the affordable care act....a low pressure area with cyclonic winds drawing in each  component of the American health systemm. In the cyclone are violent thunderstorms and tornados..  These analogies are the large group and integrated health systems.  Unlike individual and small group entities they carry more weight and influence on the storm.  Each has it's own  niche in  the system.

The storm effects the entire country to it's core, economic, social and health.  The storm is about human survival, much like a hurricane bearing down on the community (metropolitan, or rural.). The most vulnerable are those living in the lowlands, near the ocean.  This  demographic is most vulnerable and require the most protection from storm surge and strong winds. They are  also   the least influential and require special protection as the storm advances.

These analogies are a powerful vision of what is and has taken place during the last four years.  The uninsured have been the center of this storm.  The effort to include them in our insurance system has effected the entire system.

The sheer  number, to include 40 million is an almost overwhelming increase in patients.  In practical terms resources are limited. The administrative burden (which includes planning and implementation of new organizations, financing...regulation, delivery of care and the change from fee for service to quality-based and value are considerable.







Monday, March 28, 2016

Health Care Fades Into The Background Of 2016 Election Cycle |

Health Care Fades Into The Background Of 2016 Election Cycle

Can a lame duck congress or the executive branch plan meaningful changes to the Affordable Care Act?

It would seem apparent no significant changes will occur until the new administration is inaugurated. 

Audio analysis from NPR and the Kaiser Health Foundation


Can’t see the audio player? Click here to download the file.



"Healthcare played starring roles in the 2008 and 2012 election cycles. President Obama's Affordable Care Act became the battle cry of politicians hoping to ascend to the highest office in the land. But Obamacare passed through the gauntlets of the U.S. Congress and Supreme Court, and came out in tact.
Whether it's fatigue with the topic of healthcare, a shift in the public's priorities, or other campaign year distractions, how we pay for our doctor's visits has fallen from the top of the nation's priorities list.
With Obamacare battles largely behind us, presidential candidates in 2016 seem focused on other issues.
Health care played starring roles in the 2008 and 2012 election cycles. President Obama’s Affordable Care Act became the battle cry of politicians hoping to ascend to the highest office in the land. But Obamacare passed through the gauntlets of the U.S. Congress and Supreme Court, and came out in tact.
Whether it’s fatigue with the topic of health care, a shift in the public’s priorities, or other campaign year distractions, how we pay for our doctor’s visits has fallen from the top of the nation’s priorities list.







Regardless, though, we wanted to check in on what politicians are saying about health care with Kaiser Health News correspondent Julie Rovner, who acknowledges that candidates this year aren’t really health care-focused, but she reminds us that it’s still an important topic.

“Health care is always going to be an issue in a presidential campaign if the economy is, because it’s kind of a proxy for people’s economic anxiety,” says Rovner.

Rovner spoke with The Pulse host Maiken Scott about the health care policy differences between the candidates."